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80 pp.
| Chronicle |
September, 2020 |
TradeISBN 978-1-4521-3779-7$18.99
(1)
K-3
Quinn, a small child in a red gnome hat, writes a letter to potential visitors to our planet to explain to them what we're about: our location in the universe, our geography, our natural world, and the varied ways we humans manage housing, clothing, transportation, family life, and getting along. It's a promising (and idealistic) premise, and Blackall deftly captures the approach and tone of a child writer. "Fish can swim but they can't walk. Most animals can walk or swim or gallop or hop, but they can't fly. Some birds can swim and walk and fly, so if I had to choose, I'd be a bird." The true delight of the book, however, lies in its stunning illustrations. Each page features a dynamic, energetic composition, a wealth of precise detail arranged in unexpected ways. For instance, a flock of various birds forms the shape of a single bird if you squint. There are games to play, from finding Quinn in the crowd to recognizing some famous people among the field of folk that Blackall portrays (Ella Fitzgerald, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Carla Hayden, to name a few). The robust subtext is diversity in all the usual areas as well as quirkier ones, such as all the different ways humans can arrange our legs to sit comfortably on a picnic blanket. Sweet, funny, moving, timely, and beautiful.
Reviewer: Sarah Ellis
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
September, 2020